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Tensions High At Gettysburg Confederate Flag Rally

GETTYSBURG, Pa. (KDKA/AP) - Supporters and opponents of use of the Confederate flag clashed verbally in opposing demonstrations at Gettysburg National Military Park, with tensions high at times.

Cumberland Township police and park officers had to separate a few people Saturday afternoon before disagreements became physical, Hanover's The Evening Sun newspaper reported.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans Gettysburg group said its Confederate Flag Day gathering at the park's Eternal Peace Light Monument was intended to honor Southern ancestors.

A counter-demonstration was organized by a Gettysburg College associate professor of history and Africana studies, Scott Hancock, who said he wanted to offer a different perspective on the flag's meaning.

Other than trading insults and invective, there were few interactions between the opposing groups, which were separated by a few hundred feet and two portable fences.

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The park features relics of the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg and the people who fought in the Civil War. Chief ranger Jeremy Murphy said he hadn't seen a similar situation at the park since a Ku Klux Klan rally in June 2014.

"They were both of a similar nature. We had a group of people to have a program on one side and counter-demonstrators on the other," he said. "There's always the potential for violent situations, which is why we're out here trying to maintain neutral ground."

Marcia Laughman, of York, said she went to the Confederate Flag Day event with her husband and son to show her support. She said she views the flag as a way to celebrate her heritage and ancestors.

Christina Hansen, former professor at Gettysburg College, said she thought there were other ways to celebrate Southern heritage, comparing the flag to the swastika used by the Nazis.

"I have German heritage. Do I have a swastika that I fly around? No, because they were evil," she said. "Whether or not you are a racist, you are using something that signifies that."

During the demonstrations, a pickup truck drove by the monument, and the driver, wearing a hat with the Confederate flag on it, yelled, "The South will rise again." The remark drew expletives from the other group, and one person using a megaphone responded, "Our cause is more important than your heritage."

Dr. Jill Titus, a Civil War professor at Gettysburg College tells the "KDKA Morning News" that the flag should never be, "removed from historical spaces such as museums; however the battlefield itself, the open land, belongs to the American public."

She adds that the flag stands for more than southern history and has been, "associated with hate and bigotry for a long, long time."

(TM and © Copyright 2016 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2016 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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